Jan van den Berg

Jonathan Franzen on reading and literature

I've been on a bit of a Jonathan Franzen bender lately. I frequently write about him on my other site. The kickstart for all this was a book club meeting about Crossroads for which I not only read the book, but also watched and read a dozen or so Franzen interviews. Older and newer interviews.

What really struck a chord with me was not so much the specific Crossroads discussions in these interviews, but the things Franzen says about reading and literature in general.

And I noticed similarities in interviews that are sometimes decades apart.

I created a supercut video of two specific Franzen interviews that are 20 years apart. In this video a younger and older Franzen talks about reading, literature and love. See if you can spot the commonalities.

David Foster Wallace kicks off the video (who else?). If you didn't already know that Franzen and Wallace were friends you can tell by just watching them converse. It's a delight.

In the YouTube description I also link to the two original videos, which are much broader and interesting in their own right (do watch them!) but this supercut specifically highlights ideas Franzen has about reading and literature.

Here is a list of questions (one of these is rhetorical*). The questions serve partly as a videoguide as they are answered in the video. But you can also try and discuss them beforehand, or even after watching the video (e.g. for your own book club).

Questions

The video ends with 2016 Franzen making remarks about technology. Remarks that perfectly tie in to what Wallace -- in 1996 -- says at the beginning of the video about the influence of technology on reading.

Here is the video:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZhJWrFjDalA

https://www.youtube.com/c/JanvandenBerg

books, david-foster-wallace, favorites, jonathan-franzen, literature, video

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